Daniel Lesson 22
Defeating Fear; Stability in Crisis
– Daniel 5:2-10
During
World War II FDR said it most concisely in one of his speeches; that “we have
nothing to fear but fear itself.”
Few emotional sins are as self-destructive and as self-defeating as
fear. When you give into fear you
become a slave of the object you fear and you become controlled by the
controlled by the object of your dread.
Today people in this nation are paralyzing themselves with fear. As long as they do this they let the
terrorists win. Rarely before in
our history have believers in the Lord Jesus Christ had such a fantastic
opportunity to stand out and to shine as examples of true courage, bravery and
integrity. We see this same kind
of example in Daniel 5.
Daniel
5:1, Daniel and the Queen Mother, Nitocris, stand out as stalwart examples of
believers who are applying doctrine in the midst of a national crisis and have
complete poise and stability despite the fact that they know that this very
night the kingdom is going to be taken from Babylon, it will be overrun by the
enemies of Babylon, by the Persians, and on the new day there will be a new
government in place, a new power in control and their positions of privilege,
their positions of aristocracy will probably no longer be theirs and they could
very well be dead by morning.
Remember
the purpose for Daniel is to teach us how to grow to spiritual maturity in a
pagan environment. Too often we
think that all the believers in the Bible somehow lived in these wonderful environments
where everybody around them was a Christian, everybody thought like they did,
and nothing could be further from the truth, especially when we get into this
period of time when you have people like Daniel, Jeremiah and Ezekiel were
living outside the land, completely surrounded by Gentiles who were worshiping
the entire pantheon of false gods.
What they faced on a day to day basis probably was much worse in terms
of the overt paganism, immorality, idolatry and everything that goes with it,
it was much worse than anything that you and I face. The indoctrination that they went through personally in
their own job training, the indoctrination their kids were put through, was
probably much greater and much more intense than the kind of indoctrination the
world system, the cosmic system in the secular education system in this country
is forcing us through.
So it
tells us something about how to live our spiritual life and grow to spiritual
maturity in the midst of a pagan environment; and that the path to spiritual
growth is always through trials.
James 1:2-4 says, “Count if all joy, my brethren, when you encounter
various trials, [3] because you know that the testing of your faith produces
endurance. [4] And endurance will
have its maturing result, that will make you mature and complete.” 1 Corinthians 10:13, “There is no
temptation taken you but such as is common to man, but God is faithful and
will, with the temptation make a way to escape that you may be able to endure
it,” and endurance in times of testing, and that means to stick with the Word,
stick with applying the Word, no matter how difficult it becomes, no matter how
strong the temptation is to bail out and to try some other system to solve
life’s problems, sticking with the Word of God in tough times is the key to
spiritual growth. And we’ve seen
that Daniel and his friends, Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego clearly
demonstrated that.
Furthermore,
we’ve seen that every chapter in Daniel sees believers in some kind of either
personal or national crisis. We
watch how they handle those crises, how they keep the external adversity from
being transformed into stress in the soul. This book ultimately, even though it has much to say about
prophecy and God’s plan for history, it’s not about prophecy but it’s how God
continues to maintain control over the affairs of men, even when everything
around us seems chaotic and out of control. The events of chapter 5 are no exception. We learn four things here that we’ve
emphasized.
First of
all, Jesus Christ controls history.
No matter how crazy things might seem, no matter how chaotic history
might seem, no matter how great the upheaval, we know that Jesus Christ
controls history. Second, we
emphasized that Jesus Christ is sovereign, not only over Gentiles and Jews but
Moslems and Christians, terrorists and criminals. Nothing can happen apart from God’s sovereign will, He
controls everything. He allows
evil, He controls evil and He will ultimately bring evil to its final
destruction. The third thing that
we have seen is that the believer’s life and destiny is in the hand of
God. The Lord Jesus Christ has
already determined from eternity past the time, manner and the place of your
death, and since that has been set from eternity past, why are you worried
about it. Get on an airplane, go
to New York, go to DC, go into combat, but don’t worry about the things we have
no control over. God has already
determined the time, the manner and the place of our death so no matter what
our situation might be, whether we’re facing an enemy in combat or the
potential of some cowardly terrorist act here at home, we can relax because our
destiny is in God’s hands and we can live life to the fullest. The fourth point is that the only
security that we have in this life is in a relationship with the Lord Jesus
Christ based on Bible doctrine.
The only security we have in this life, it’s not based on financial
security, job security, it’s not based on military security, political
security, legislative security, none of those things can provide real genuine
security in this life. Only the
Lord Jesus Christ and a relationship with Him can provide true security.
Last
time we saw that this kind of stability is based only on Bible doctrine, which
comes from the revelation of God.
We started by looking at a passage in Jeremiah. This passage describes the contrast
that we’re going to see between Belshazzar the king on the one hand, and Daniel
and Nitocris on the other hand.
Jeremiah 17:5, “Thus says the LORD, ‘Cursed is the man who trusts in
mankind and makes flesh his strength.’”
That’s what’s going on with Belshazzar and with everybody else in
Babylon. They’re putting their
trust in their false gods, they’re putting their trust in the walls that
surrounded Babylon, they’re putting their trust in their military might and the
fact that they’re inside Fort Babylon and they have closed everything up and
they have enough food and wine and water to last them for a year or more and
they think they can just sit and out wait the Persian army but the problem is
the Persians have their own plan, they have some great engineers and this is
the night that they’re going to fall.
This verse represents the false hope, the false confidence, and the
false trust of mankind. “Cursed is
the man who trusts in mankind and makes flesh his strength, and whose heart
turns away from the Lord. [6] For
he will be like a bush in the desert, and he will not see,” that is, he will
not have perception, he won’t understand truth, he won’t even know prosperity
when he sees it, “but will live in stony wastes in the wilderness, a land of
salt without inhabitant.” We went
through this in detail last week.
In
contrast in verse 7 we have the blessed man. This is represented by Daniel and
Nitocris, believers who have assimilated doctrine and they are applying
doctrine in the midst of the crisis.
“Blessed is the man who trusts in Yahweh and whose trust is Yahweh. [8] For he will be like a tree planted
by the water, that extends its roots by a stream and will not fear when the
heat comes,” that is when the pressure comes, when the outside pressure of
adversity comes, he “will not fear when the heat comes, but is leaves will be
green,” even in the midst of crisis there is no stress in the soul, the
believer is relaxed, calm, tranquil and shares the happiness of Jesus
Christ. “…its leaves will be
green,” it will still be productive and fruitful, “and it will not be anxious
in a year of drought nor cease to yield fruit.” The believer who is operating on doctrine does not cave in
to worry, anxiety and fear, and does not cease yielding fruit. Whenever we cave in to fear what
happens is we cease producing fruit, we’re out of fellowship and we’re in
danger of self-destructing in our spiritual life.
The
second thing we saw is that only doctrine provides national stability…only
doctrine, that is, the revelation of God, the Word of God taught faithfully by
pastor-teachers can preserve the nation.
This is seen in Proverbs 29:18, which is so often mistranslated: “Where
there is no vision,” this is not talking about some kind of insight into the
future of a church, corporation or nation. “Where there is no vision,” vision comes from the Hebrew
word chazown,
which means revelation, this is the revelatory vision God gave a prophet in the
Old Testament. So this is talking
about Bible doctrine. “Where there
is no Bible doctrine the people are unrestrained,” that means they run wild
from the Hebrew word pera‘. When people
reject doctrine they become lawless, they end up rejecting absolutes. But the contrast is “happy” or “blessed
is he who keeps the Law.” And as a
result of doctrine, we saw the people run wild in a panic, they fall apart, and
they cave in to fear, mental attitude sins, and that is their weakness. And this is typical of any culture as
it reaches its end.
Last
time we quickly went over an analysis of history, first stated by Alexander
Frazier Tyler who lived from 1748-1813 in his book, The Decline and Fall of the Athenian
Republic. There he noted that
there were patterns, in every empire there are patterns of their rise and their
fall, and so he wrote it out this way: “Man begins his existence in bondage and
rises from bondage through spiritual faith,” when we’re down at our very worst,
finally we turn to God.
Unfortunately for many people that is the only time they turn to
God. It’s amazing how many people
are suddenly talking about God in the last month, and God bless America has
been so overused in the last month but it’s nice that nobody is taking anybody
to court when they talk about God bless America in public buildings. “Man begins his existence in bondage
and rises from bondage through spiritual faith,” and then the next stage, as he
moves from spiritual faith to courage, because it is doctrine that is the
foundation for real moral courage in life, and then that courage allows him to
move to the next stage which is liberty, to fight for liberty, it takes courage
to fight for liberty, freedom is only won through military victory. Nobody ever had freedom in this life
that they didn’t earn, that they didn’t fight for that somebody didn’t die
for. And the freedoms that people
have in this nation to disagree with war, to get out and march against war, to
express their pacifistic and cowardly ideas, that freedom was paid for by men
and women who gave the ultimate sacrifice for that freedom. It is a sad thing that people don’t
recognize that their very ideals of pacifism are there because somebody died
for it.
“…courage
to liberty, liberty to abundance,” once you have a free nation with a free
market you can have prosperity, and that brings abundance but so often nations
fail the prosperity test just as people fail the prosperity test and what
happens is we become complacent and we give in to arrogance and
self-centeredness. So we move then
on the decline, “from abundance to selfish-ness,” and as we become more and
more self-centered and self-absorbed we become complacent, “from selfishness to
complacency, then complacency leads to apathy,” and people don’t want to get
involved, they don’t want to sacrifice, they don’t’ want to give up, they don’t
want to get involved, they don’t want to change their life, they would rather
sell their freedoms in order to remain secure. So they move “from selfishness to complacency, from
complacency to apathy, from apathy to dependency” and finally they complete the
cycle, “from dependency back into bondage.”
When
people become slaves in their soul which is the result of living according to
the sin nature, in any culture where the vast majority of the people are living
according to the sin nature, with no restraint on the sin nature from either
establishment principles in the law or from Bible doctrine, when there’s no
restraint on the sin nature and people are giving themselves completely over to
it, they’re enslaved to the sin nature, according to roman’s 6 and the result
is that that nation that is enslaved to the sin nature will before long become
enslaved as a culture. The only
way to break this cycle is through Bible doctrine, through national change of
thinking and where the priorities are shifted. But this did not happen with Babylon, they had the
opportunity. Belshazzar probably
heard the gospel many times; he was familiar with the God of the Jews, he was
familiar with the Jews, he was familiar with Daniel, as we shall see, but he
failed to heed the message.
Let’s
review the setting. Daniel 5:1
says: “Belshazzar the king,” and we have seen that he is really the co-regent
with his father, Nabonidus. He is
the grandson, through his mother Nitocris, of the great Nebuchadnezzar. Nitocris was probably the youngest or
one of the youngest of Nebuchadnezzar’s daughters and she married
Nabonidus. Belshazzar has been
co-regent with Nabonidus since about the third year of Nabonidus’ reign and at
this point Nabonidus is in semi-retirement, he loved old things, he loved to
dig things up, he was always rebuilding old temples and reconstructing them,
he’d rather do that than sit in the place of power in Babylon. So Belshazzar, for all practical
purposes, ran the empire and it was falling apart because Belshazzar did not
have the capacity in his soul to carry out the responsibilities to reign. He had rejected the wisdom that was
given him and so now he is consumed with arrogance and he thinks that he has
complete security inside the walls of the nation.
So he
has a party, that’s what we’re told in verse 1, “Belshazzar the king held a
great feast for a thousand of his nobles,” now this was really a small dinner
party. We have historical records
from the Persians where the Persian kings would have dinner parties for ten or
twelve thousand. So Belshazzar is
just having a small little intimate get-together here with a thousand of his
closest friends and most needed admirers, and they’re having quite a time. You can just imagine what it was like
in there, in this enormous banquet hall, all the noise, the din of all the
servers and servants coming in, serving the meals, the clanking of the dishes
and the gold goblets and the silver goblets and they’re enjoying their wine and
the talk is getting louder and louder and that’s the background.
We’re
told in verse 2, “When Belshazzar tasted the wine, he gave orders to bring the
gold and silver vessels which Nebuchadnezzar, his father,” actually his
grandfather, the Hebrew term can mean father or grandfather, in fact, there are
seven different ways in which the term “father” is used in the Aramaic. “…which Nebuchadnezzar, his father, had
taken out of the temple which was in Jerusalem,” so he is going to commit
sacrilege at this point. Now I
think what’s gone on here is he’s trying to demonstrate his control over the
gods and a reminder of one of the great victories that they had over the gods
and that the gods of Babylon, the gods of Marduk are superior to all of the
other gods and what has happened in Nabonidus’ retreat as the Persian army has
come down from the south they have just rolled up the Babylonian army, they’ve
conquered one town after another, and every time Nabonidus went into retreat he
took the local gods from the temples and brought them all back to Babylon so
they lined the streets of Babylon with all the various deities representing all
the gods in the Babylonian pantheon.
And of course, there’s no idol to represent the God of Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob, so Belshazzar is going to demonstrate their superiority there by
bringing out the vessels from the temple, but this is the height of blasphemy
and a challenge against God and it is no mere coincidence that it is as soon as
he brings out the gold and silver vessels that the handwriting begins to appear
on the wall.
So he
brings out the vessels, “the temple vessels which were in Jerusalem, in order
that the king and his nobles, his wives, and his concubines might drink from
them.” Now it’s unusual at a
dinner like this to have his entire harem there but when it says “his wives and
his concubines,” he’s brought out his whole harem so the suggestion is that
they are having a wild party, bordering on a Roman orgy, and from what we know
about the Babylonians, they did not shirk getting involved in some… let’s just
say some extreme sexual hi jinx, so they are having quite the time and
everybody is getting good and drunk.
Then in
Daniel 5:3, “Then they brought the gold vessels that had been taken out of the
temple, the house of God,” notice the writer repeats that so we get the point,
pay attention to the context, “they brought the gold vessels that had been
taken out of the temple, the house of God, which was in Jerusalem; and the king
and his nobles, his wives, and his concubines drank from them.” So it’s demonstrating that … none of
them have the right to, they’re not Levitical priests and so it is sacrilege,
it is blasphemy; they are making a theological statement showing their
superiority over God.
Daniel
5:4, “They drank the wine and praise the gods of gold and silver, of bronze,
iron, wood and stone.” And here
the structure indicates two different categories of gods; the gold and silver
are linked together, these would be the higher gods, the higher idols, whose
statures were made of gold and silver, and then the lower echelon of gods whose
idols were just built out “of bronze, iron, wood and stone.”
In
Daniel 5:5 we have the sudden dramatic change; all of a sudden fingers
appear. Now it’s important to
notice that the Hebrew here is the word ’etsba‘, and it doesn’t’ mean hand at all, it’s
just the fingers, so you don’t even have the appearance of the palm, you just
have a group of fingers appearing on the wall. And suddenly the place grows silent. God is going to announce His judgment
and proceed to condemn the empire of Babylon at this particular point because
Belshazzar has called divine judgment down upon himself. He has been exposed to the Word, he’s
familiar with Daniel but he has rejected it time and time again. [5 “Suddenly the fingers of a man’s
hand emerged and began writing opposite the lampstand on the plaster of the
wall of the king’s palace, and the king saw the back of the hand that did the
writing.”]
Now I
want you to picture this. Archeologists have discovered this particular banquet
hall; it was enormous, 173 feet long and 56 feet wide. It was part of the Hanging Gardens and
was an enormous banquet hall that was used for all their state dinners. But not only have we found the banquet
hall and the entrance to this room, but opposite the entrance way, which is in
the middle of the building, it’s a large rectangular building and you enter in
from one side and opposite that side on the long wall there’s a niche cut in
the wall, and that’s where the king would sit. And the entire interior of the wall was covered with
plaster, which is what the text says, that the handwriting appeared on the
plaster of the wall. And when the
archeologists discovered this, the pieces of the plaster were still there, so
the Bible is very accurate down to the minute details. When it talks about this plaster on the
wall it was a white plaster, so the letters would appear very clear, even in
the midst of the candlelight dinners.
Remember they didn’t have electrical chandeliers, they didn’t even have
gas light, they just had various candelabra on all the tables, and suddenly
this hand appeared above the king, and he’s probably up there having a great
time and telling a few jokes and swashing his wine around and all of a sudden
he notices that everybody’s staring at him and they’re not talking any
more. And then he turns around and
sees these letters begin to appear on the wall. No one knows what they mean and no one knows their
significance, and he is struck with fear.
Daniel
5:6, “Then the king’s face grew pale,” instantly all the blood drains out of
his face, “and his thoughts alarmed him;” I want you to notice that this is a
principle here that’s true of every carnal Christian and every
non-Christian. When an individual
is on negative volition and operating on the sin nature his conscience is
always sensitive and will always give testimony to his failures, given the
right circumstances. And no matter
how skilled you might be at covering up your conscience and hardening your
conscience and suppressing it, sooner or later you’re going to get into some
situation and all of a sudden all those things in your conscience are going to
come bubbling to the surface and you’re going to become overwhelmed with guilt
and guilt always comes along with its handmaiden, fear, which is the fear of
discovery and the fear of having to pay the consequences for our actions. Fear is the result, then, of letting
our mind focus on the wrong things.
See, “his thoughts alarmed him,” he’s letting his mind focus on the
wrong thing, he’s not focused on the task at hand and he becomes controlled by
the emotional sin of fear and the results are that he’s physically destroyed,
“and his hip joints went slack, and his knees began knocking together.” He can’t think, he can’t move, he can’t
function; he is overwhelmed by guilt.
Now I want you to notice the contrast, we’re going to come back and look at the
doctrine of fear in a minute but I want you to notice the contrast. Here when the fingers appear and the
handwriting appears he falls apart, he just turns to jello right there in front
of everybody, just like so many people in this country are just turning into
jello right now, they don’t want to go out of their houses. Look at the contrast, look down to
verse 10, “The queen entered,” now this is his mother, Queen Nitocris, “entered
the banquet hall,” she’s the picture of stately decorum, she’s elegant, she’s
poised, she “entered the banquet hall,” everybody is quiet, everybody is scared
to death, you could hear a pin drop, she walks up before the king. We read, Daniel 5:10, “The queen
entered the banquet hall because of the words of the king and his nobles; the
queen spoke and said, O king, live forever!” That’s a standard address, that’s how you had to preface
everything. “Don’t let your
thoughts alarm you or your face be pale.”
She immediately tries to get him to calm down, straighten things
out. She is the picture of control
and she knows what the solution is and she’s going to tell him to call for
Daniel.
Daniel
5:13, we see Daniel come in and Daniel too is not going to be swayed by
Belshazzar’s bribes, his attempts to give him power and money and reward in
order to give him a good interpretation of what’s on the wall. So we see in contrast to Belshazzar two
believers who are stable, who are poised, who are calm in the midst of crisis
and who exude almost a bravado because of the fact that the understand the plan
and purpose of God in the midst of a national crisis. So at this point we need to stop a minute, we need to
understand the doctrine of fear, what the Bible teaches about fear.
First of
all we need to recognize that fear is used two different ways in the
Bible. First of all it is used for
mental attitude sin of fear, and mental attitude sin of fear, it’s an emotional
sin that’s characterized by anxiety, worry, dread, and panic in a crisis. It’s aroused by real or perceived danger. It doesn’t have to be a real
danger. You remember when you were
a kid and you’d turn the lights off at night and you thought the boogey man was
under the bed. It’s a real or perceived danger, impending crisis, disaster or
evil. It’s related to worry,
apprehension, consternation, horror and dread. Fear and all these other mental attitude sins are a sign
that we are converting the outside pressure of adversity into the inside
pressure of stress in the soul and guess what is in control of your soul? Your sin nature is starting to run wild
with you. There’s only one
solution and that’s going to be confession of sin and getting your focus on
doctrine, having some promises in the mentality of your soul that you can
immediately recall so that you can begin to stabilize your emotions by focusing
on doctrine.
Whenever
I think about this I’m always reminded of a story that Charlie Clough
tells. Years ago Charlie was
pasturing a church down in Lubbock, Texas, and one of the men in his church had
been a bomber pilot in Vietnam when they started the bombing runs on
Hanoi. To some of you that’s
ancient history but others of you can remember that. And the first time he went in, and I don’t know much about
the strategy and tactics of bomber formation but you stack them two or three
deep and everybody has a wing man and you’ve got different layers and everybody
is protecting one another, and the last thing you want to happen is for
somebody in the midst of this type formation to start baling out and start
zigzagging all over the sky and trying to avoid all the anti-aircraft
fire. And so the first time this
guy is going into combat and all of a sudden the anti-aircraft fire starts
blowing up all around him he said that was your immediate response, you want to
grab the controls and start dodging all over the sky. And this guy had grown up at Berachah Church and back in
those days, still to some degree, the pastor would, as I do, quote some verses. That’s one reason I always quote those
different verses before each class, is because for many of you that’s going to
be about the only way you’re going to memorize those Scriptures, if you hear me
say them week after week after week.
And this is where I got the idea from, is that this guy as he was going
into combat all of a sudden he heard the voice of Pastor Thieme in the back of
his head, “Fear thou not for I am with thee, be not dismayed for I am thy God,
I will strengthen thee, yea I will help thee, yea I will uphold thee with the
right hand of my righteousness. And
he said he quoted that verse about 500 times before he got back to base that
day. But he heard that just as
clear as a bell and that immediately stabilized his emotions, he got past the
fear and focused on his task. So
that is what we’re supposed to do.
Fear is
related to emotionalism and once you let any emotional sin control your soul
then you are in serious trouble; you become a prey for irrationalism,
emotionalism and you will become a victim of false thinking. So this is what we are going to address:
the mental attitude sin of emotion, the emotional sin of fear.
The
second way in which fear is used in the Bible is related to respect, awe or
reverence and this is about all we’ll say about this category tonight so I want
to run through a few verses where it is used in this way. 1 Peter 2:17 says, “Honor all men, love
the brotherhood,” that is other believers, that is not the brotherhood of
mankind, that’s a liberal idea; you do not enter into the royal family of God
until you put your faith and trust in Jesus Christ. Scripture teaches that all men do not have God as their
Father. When Jesus was in a
confrontation with the Pharisees, and these were religious moral men, He said,
“You are of your father, the devil,” that until you are born again, born from
above, where you put your faith alone in Christ alone, it is only at that point
that we are adopted into the royal family of God. And so there’s no such thing as the brotherhood of mankind
and the fatherhood of God, that is classic 19th century religious
liberalism and has nothing to do with the Bible, it’s just religious
fluff. “Honor all me, love the
brotherhood, fear God,” that means to have reverence and respect for God,
“honor the king.”
Articulated
in the Old Testament, Deuteronomy 17:19, “And it shall be with him and he shall
read it all the days of his life, that he may learn,” this is the instruction
to the king, “that he may learn to fear Yahweh, his God, by carefully observing
all the words of this law and these statutes.” Leviticus 25:17, “So you shall not wrong one another, but
you shall fear your God, for I am the LORD your God.” Psalm 111:10, “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of
wisdom. A good understanding have
all those who do His commandments, His praise endures forever,” and this is
reiterated in Proverbs 1:7, “The fear of the LORD,” that’s the starting point,
the fear of the Lord has to do with authority orientation. When we become a little fearful of the
Lord, it’s a healthy fear because we know that a little divine discipline is
going to come with disobedience and we realize the seriousness of our spiritual
life. That’s the beginning of learning.
You don’t really learn something until you begin to realize there are
consequences for not learning.
“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge, fools despise
wisdom and instruction.”
Then
this same word for fear, the Greek word is phobeomai and it is used in Ephesians 5:33 in
describing the love of a wife for her husband, “Nevertheless let each individual
among you also love his own wife, even as himself, and let the wife see to it
that she fear her husband,” that’s phobeo and it’s the idea of respect and
reverence. I think it’s
interesting that it doesn’t tell the wife to love her husband, it tells her to
respect her husband because that is indeed a high form of love.
So in
this first point we’ve seen that fear is used two ways in the Bible; first it’s
a mental attitude sin and second, as reverence, awe and respect.
The
second point, neglect of doctrine and failure to realize that security comes
only from God is the root of all fear.
The root of all fear is the neglect of doctrine and the failure to
realize that security can only come from God, from a relationship with the Lord
Jesus Christ and Bible doctrine.
For example, Belshazzar had years to respond to doctrine through the
gospel, but he is ignorant of the gospel, he’s rejected it. He’s aware of Daniel, he’s aware of
Daniel’s past, he’s aware of the God of the Jews but he’s rejected the gospel
again and again. Remember at the
end of Nebuchadnezzar’s reign when Belshazzar was probably 16, 17 or 18 years
of age, Nebuchadnezzar spent seven years in insanity. So that would roughly correspond to
Belshazzar’s adolescent years. He
knew all about it, when that was over with Nebuchadnezzar published a
proclamation that was read to every man, woman and child in the nation. And it was an evangelism tract, and
that was Daniel 4. And yet
Belshazzar is not a believer, he has rejected the gospel again and again. So fear starts because we neglect
doctrine and we fail to realize that real security, genuine security comes only
from Jesus Christ and Bible doctrine.
Third,
fear is a failure to think under pressure. Instead of thinking you’re emoting, you’re feeling, you’re
operating on adrenalin surge. Fear
is a failure to think under pressure and it is a realization that our own
attempts at security are fruitless, realization of our finitetude. Fear is an irrational and an emotional
sin. We need to realize that part
of this that fear is the basic emotional sin that goes with arrogance. Fear is the basic emotional sin that
goes with arrogance; get that in your notes. In arrogance the creature thinks that he amounts to
something, he thinks he is somebody; he’s impressed with himself. He thinks that he has the ability to
solve his problems on his own or he’s smart enough to figure out how. But deep in his soul every creature
knows he’s limited. He knows his
limitations, he knows he can’t do it; he knows he can’t be the source of his
own security. And in arrogance as
soon as the creature is confronted with some problem, some crisis that’s too
big for him to handle, then immediately the emotional sin of fear takes over.
See, in
arrogance we think we can solve everything but as soon as something comes along
that’s too big for us, immediately the first reaction emotionally is fear. This happens in Genesis 3. After the fall, Adam eats the fruit,
and then we’re told [8] “they heard the sound of the LORD God walking in the
Garden in the cool of the day.”
This was standard operating procedure in the Garden, every day the Lord
came and spent time with Adam and Eve and taught them, and they interacted
about creation and they were learning about creation, they were learning about
all of the animals, they were observing things, they were making
observations. Adam and Eve had
IQ’s that we can only imagine. I
mean, they came straight from the hand of God, their intelligence was far
beyond anything we can imagine and every day they’re exploring this new
creation. They’re learning about
everything and now God comes to spend time with them this day and there’s
something different. This time
they run and hide, “and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence
of the Lord God among the trees of the Garden.”
Rather
than coming out and welcoming Him and looking forward to this time they run and
they hide. Why? Verse 9, “Then the LORD God called to
the man, and said to him, Where are you?”
And the Lord knows where they are, He’s omniscient, He’s saying this,
asking this question rhetorically in order to get them to focus on where they
are. They’re hiding; they’re not
out coming to greet Him. Verse 10,
“And he,” this is the man, “said, I heard the sound of Thee in the garden and I
was afraid because I was naked so I hid myself.” So what is the first sin after eating the fruit? It’s fear. Fear is the first emotional sin experienced by man in his
arrogance after the fall. Fear is
the core emotional sin that goes hand and hand with arrogance. So the core emotion is fear. Keep that in your memory because in a
few minutes we’re going to get in a passage in 1 John that goes completely
counter to what most people think and if you don’t have Genesis 3:10 as the background
you won’t understand what’s going on in 1 John when we get there.
Fourth
point, for the believer fear begins with failure to learn and apply
doctrine. Once the believer is out
of fellowship, once you sin, once you decide to try to solve the problem on
your own, then sin begins to gnaw away at the soul, it eats away and all of a
sudden that foundation of doctrine that you’ve built begins to erode, fissures
begin to appear, the soul begins to fragment and the only way to recover is to
use 1 John 1:9, confess your sins, “God is faithful and just to forgive us our
sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” Now we recover fellowship, now we recover the filling of the
Holy Spirit and now we can continue to advance in the spiritual life and if you’re
still alive, no matter how much you’ve been out of fellowship, no matter how
fragmented your soul, there’s always recovery, there’s always a grace procedure
for recovery. Fear, we must
remember, cannot coexist with the operation of the Holy Spirit in our spiritual
life. They are mutually
exclusive. With doctrine we say
“the battle is the Lord’s” and…[tape turns]
…we set
ourselves up for attack and fear.
A couple of things that go along with this, first of all, sub points:
people who live by fear are intimidated by life. The believer who lives in a state of fear lives with an
emotional cancer that’s eating away at his soul. Second sub point: fear eliminates motivation, first from
personal love for God, second from a personal sense of destiny, and the
believer succumbs to worry, anxiety, guilt, and all the other sins. Third sub point: fear of death, this is
all under point four, just some sub points and some observations, fear of death
will never prevent your death, but it will destroy your enjoyment of life. And a final observation: fear is being
overcome by the problem, enmeshed in the crisis and engulfed in emotion it is
not security.
Point
five: fear is often thought to be the opposite of stability, the opposite of
tranquility, the opposite of happiness but it is rooted in an understanding of
God’s love, that’s the point. Fear
is not the opposite of stability or peace; fear is the opposite of love. See, most of you sitting out there and
you thought hate was the opposite of love. Well, let’s pay attention to what the Scripture says.
Turn to
1 John 4:12, we don’t have time to go through everything in this passage but I
want to hit the high points because this is truly instructive on our spiritual
life. “No one has beheld God at
any time; if we love one another, God abides in us,” now that takes back to a
whole range of studies we’ve done on this Greek word meno, and meno relates to fellowship, so we’re
talking about the believer in fellowship with the Lord, “God abides in us”
where there is fellowship, “and His love is perfected,” now that’s a bad
translation. I hate it when the
Greek translators translate this word group with that word “perfect.” Perfect implies lawlessness, but the
word group, telios,
telioo, telos in the Greek has to do with two things: quality, flawlessness
is quality; perfection is quality.
It also has to do with quantity, completing something. And I have yet with one possible
exception to find any place in the New Testament where this word group refers
to flawlessness. It refers to
completion. “If we love one
another,” this is exercising those advanced spiritual skills of personal love
for God the Father, impersonal love for all mankind and occupation with Christ,
“if we love one another, God abides in us,” we can only do that if we’re in
fellowship with God, “and His love is brought to completion in us,” that’s the
process of spiritual growth.
1 John
4:13, “By this we know that we abide in Him,” there’s going to be some
evidence, how can you know if you abide in Him, “and He in us, because He has
given us of His Spirit.” In other
words, it can only be produced by the filling of God the Holy Spirit. The
Christian life is a supernatural way of life and demands a supernatural means
of execution, which is the Holy Spirit.
1 John
4:14, “And we have beheld and bear witness that the Father has sent the Son to
be the Savior of the world. [15]
Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of God,” that is admits, acknowledges,
“that Jesus is the Son of God,” full undiminished deity, “God abides in him and
he in God.” See, that’s not
talking about salvation. Abiding is sanctification; it’s not salvation. This is talking about the fact that we
have to recognize the deity of Christ or we’re not going to be in fellowship
with the Lord because we’ll be operating on a false concept and false
doctrine.
1 John
4:16, “And we have come to know and have believed the love which God has for
us. God is love, and the one who
abides,” that is stays in fellowship with God, “stays in fellowship with love,
abides in God and God abides in him.”
So there’s this inner connection that John is developing here. [17] By this, love is matured with us,”
there’s our word telios
again in verse 17, “by this love is brought to completion,” or matured in us
literally, “that we may have confidence,” hope, notice how love is related to
confidence, “in the day of judgment; because as He is, so also are we in this
world.”
And now
here’s the verse I’ve been headed for: 1 John 4:18, “There is no fear in love,”
notice the juxtaposition, “there is no fear in love, but perfect love,” that’s
that word again, it’s not “perfect love,” it’s telos love, it is complete love, this
is the believer who has grown to maturity in his love for God the Father,
“completed love casts out fear,” it is love that casts out fear, that’s exactly
what happened in the Garden of Eden, they were afraid and they hid but God
responded in grace and love and that dealt with the problem of fear because in
grace and love God provided the solution.
So what stabilizes fear is the love of God and coming to grips with the
grace of God and salvation. It is
“complete love casts out fear,” and in this passage it is a love for God. That’s implied in the next verse, “we
love Him, because He first loved us.”
There’s a textual problem there and it should read, “we love Him,” and I
don’t have time to deal with why.
That should read, “we love Him because He first loved us.” So that establishes the context, it’s
talking about love for God. “There
is no fear in love for God,” that’s the issue for the believer. You advance in your spiritual life to the
point where you really comprehend and understand personal love for God and then
you’re not afraid any more, you’re not worried any more, you’re not tying
yourself up in knots over every little problem that comes along, you have
peace, stability, and poise because you are motivated by the love for God. You know of His love for you and that He’s
provided everything, He’s in control, you’re not in control, so you can relax
and have stability.
This
takes us to point six, which is that God’s love provides all the security we
need, God in His grace. That’s why
it’s sufficient; sufficient means more than enough. It supplies everything we need, God’s love, grace is the
expression of His love to undeserving sinners; God’s love provides all the
security we need. Failure to abide
in fellowship, then, is a rejection of divine provision and divine security. So the first emotion is fear. Failure to abide in fellowship, if you
quit walking by means of the Spirit when you encounter some crisis, what you’re
really doing is rejecting God’s grace provision. You’re saying God, you’re grace provision isn’t enough, it’s
inadequate, I don’t want it, I can do it myself. And you’re saying His security is no security and you can do
a better job yourself. In effect
that’s what’s going on and the result of that is we come face to face with our
own limitations and the consequent emotion is fear. God’s love and grace provides all the security we need.
Point
seven, fear, worry, anxiety are the key warning signs that our confidence has
shifted its focus from God to man.
Fear, worry, anxiety are key warning signs that our confidence is not in
God but in man. As soon as you
start becoming afraid, as soon as you become anxious, as soon as you feel worry
welling up inside you, instantly a red light ought to go off and say I need to
confess my sins, I need to apply some Scripture, I need to have some promises
ready to go.
If you
don’t, fear will snowball. Point
number 8; this is the snowballing principle of fear. First of all, the more things you surrender to fear the more
things you fear. You start off
fearing one thing, the next thing you know, tomorrow you’ll fear two
things. And the next day you’ll
fear three things, and then four things.
The more things you surrender to fear the more things you will
fear. That’s what’s happening with
a lot of people in this country today, they’ve surrendered their security to
fear and now more and more things are keeping them home and keeping them from
engaging in life; they’re letting the terrorists win.
Second,
the extent to which you surrender to fear the greater is your capacity to
fear. See, the more things you
fear the more things you will fear. The more you give yourself over to fear
then the greater your capacity for fear.
You become characterized by fear.
The greater your capacity for fear, then the more you increase the power
of fear in your life. And fourth,
the more you increase the power of fear in your life the greater your mindset
as a failure believer and the greater your chances of failure as a believer. The more you increase the power of fear
in your life the greater your mindset as a failure believer, and the greater
your chances to fail as a believer.
And you just go through a deteriorating downward spiral until you flame
out in the Christian life.
Point
number nine: fear is a sign that we have put an abnormal emphasis on self. Fear is a result of self-absorption and
self-indulgence. We become
fearful, we indulge our emotion, all of a sudden something happens, the first
thing that happens, it’s natural sometimes because we’re sinners, to become afraid
and we have to deal with it immediately with doctrine. But what happens is that you focus on
that, we indulge that fear, we give into that fear and then it sets the
snowballing principle in motion.
So
what’s the solution, point ten: The solution to fear is orientation to grace
because it is God’s love that’s going to cast our fear; orientation to
doctrine, because it’s the principles of the Word of God that are going to
stabilize those emotions, and personal love for God the Father because that is
what’s going to motivate you to be able to endure whatever the consequences
are, whatever the crisis is, that gives rise to your fear. So the solution to fear begins with
orientation to grace, proceeds through orientation to doctrine, and then to
personal love for God the Father.
Now what
are some promise that we can focus on, let’s close out by focusing on some
promises in the Word that you can write down that you can start memorizing so
that when the crisis comes you have something in your soul to wrap your focus
around other than well, Pastor Dean said that God’s in control so I’m just
going to rely on that. Let’s have
some passages.
Psalm
27:1, the Psalmist says, “The LORD is my light and my salvation, whom shall I
fear. The LORD is the defense of
my life; whom shall I dread?” This
is a basic a fortiori argument, the argument from strength, that if God is for
us and since nothing is greater than God, if God is for us who can be against
us. You know, if God is taking
care of me and nothing is greater than God, then why should I be afraid of
anybody else. “The LORD is my
light and my salvation,” light refers to doctrinal orientation;
salvation—grace orientation, “whom shall I fear?” if the Lord has done
the maximum in providing salvation for us at the cross, then the Lord can
handle any other problem that we face.
“The LORD is my light and my salvation. Whom shall I fear?
The LORD is the defense of my life; Whom shall I dread?”
Psalm
27:3, “Though a host encamp against me,” a host is the antiquated English word
for army, this is the same word, Sabaoth, and it refers to the Lord as the Lord
Sabaoth, the Lord of the armies.
“Though an army encamp against me,” 50,000 to 1, “though a host encamp
against me, my heart will not fear; tough war arise against me, in spite of
this I shall be confident.”
Psalm
49:5, “Why should I fear in days of adversity, when the iniquity of my foes
surrounds me,” the answer of course is doctrine.
Psalm
56:4, “In God, whose word I praise, in God I have put my trust: I shall not be
afraid what can mere man do to me?”
Isaiah
12:2, “Behold, God is my salvation, I will trust and not be afraid, for the
LORD God is my strength and song, and He has become my salvation,” He is my
deliverance.
Isaiah
41:10, a verse that you all should know by now, “Fear thou not, for I am with
thee; be not dismayed for I am thy God, I will strengthen thee, yea, I will
help thee, yea I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness.” I like the King James better; it has
more rhythm. You know why that is,
why it’s easier to memorize in the King James? Because the King James was written by men who paid attention
to the rhythm of the language because it was going to be read out loud and
that’s how most people were going to hear it and learn it, because it was going
to be read out loud in the pulpits.
So they wrote it so it would have a cadence that would be easy to speak
and therefore it’s easy to remember.
2
Timothy 1:7, “For God has not given us the spirit of timidity, but of power,
and love and discipline.” He has
“not” given us the spirit of timidity.
And
closing with Philippians 4:5-6, “Let your forbearing spirit be known to all
men. The Lord is near. [6] Be anxious for nothing, but in
everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be
made known unto God.” Then verse
7, “And the peace of God, which surpasses all comprehension, shall defend your
hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.”